VALIE EXPORT,
Hyperbulie
, 1973
VALIE EXPORT
Hyperbulie
VALIE EXPORT (*1940, Austria) is one of Austria’s most prominent artists since the late 1960s and was one of the most important pioneers of feminist art in the 1960s and 70s. She explores radical questions about the conditioning of reality and the artistic representation of mental states. In her performances, conceptual photographs, videos and experimental films, she explores how women are constructed by the dominant gaze. She also develops strategies of subverting, refusing and overcoming the loss of self. She has been influenced by feminism, Viennese Actionism and Expanded Cinema. In 2007, she took part in the Venice Biennale and documenta 12. The Centre Georges Pompidou devoted an entire room to her in 2008. In 2009, she and Silvia Eiblmayr were the commissioners of the Austrian Pavilion at the 53rd Venice Biennale. The city of Linz purchsed her archive in 2015 and opened the Valie Export Center for media and performance art research. In 2020 she announced the donation of her film works to ORF television.
artist's website:
www.valieexport.at
In
Hyperbulie
VALIE EXPORT demonstrates how thoroughly our bodies and minds are standardised and restrained by the social system. “She moves naked through a corridor of wires charged with electric current. She touches the wires over and over, collapsing in pain. She musters all her energy to reach liberation at the end of the corridor, crawling on all fours” (VALIE EXPORT,
Split:Reality
, 1997).
Courtesy VALIE EXPORT & Charim Galerie, Vienna
Document media
Video, b&w, sound, 6:49 min
Issue date
1973
Relations
Cornelia Sollfrank (SOL 1)
Ewa Partum (PART 1)
Tags
body control
,
pain
,
resistance
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abstraction
activism
aggression
aging
appropriation
authorship
be-coming
beauty
body control
body object relation
cabaret
capitalism
childhood
collectivity
conflict
consumerism
craft
dance/choreography
de/construct identities
death
desire
destruction
dis/ability
dis/appearance
dreamscapes
durational performance
exhaustion
extended body
failure
fashion/glamour
femininity
flesh
fluxus
fragmentation
gaze
happening
health/illness
his/herstory
housework/carework
human/non-human animals
in/visibility
inscription
institutional critique
intimacy
labour
language
laughter/humorous
lecture performance
manifesto
masculinity
masquerade
mass media
maternity
measuring
metamorphosis
migration
military
music
mythology
nationalism
nature
networks/affiliations
normativity
pain
painting/drawing
participation
patriarchy
pleasure
pop
post-communism
precarity
private/public
public space
queer
queer/drag
racism
re-enactment
repetition/seriality
resistance
ritual
roleplay
score
sexual violence
sexualities
skin
sound
state oppression
stereotypes
the common
therapy
torture
touch
trash
violence
voice
voyeurism
vulnerability